Weight Gain Later in Life: A Disability Risk? Leitchfield KY

Excess weight gain is never a good thing, but as we get on in years it can become downright hazardous. Are you still looking for effective way to shed the excess weight gain? This article offers you some guides.

Leitchfield Snap Fitness
270-200-1352
1907 Elizabethtown Road
Leitchfield, KY
Curves of Leitchfield
270-230-0713
507 S River Rd
Leitchfield, KY
Resolution's Gym & Fitness Center
270-756-1496
2776 E Highway 60
Harned, KY
Anytime Fitness Owensboro, KY
(270) 691-9199
3332 Villa Point, Suite 106
Owensboro, KY
Anytime Fitness Mount Washington, KY
(502) 538-0207
138 Eastbrook Ct, Suite 105
Mount Washington, KY
Physical Therapy Solutions Psc
270-230-1729
115 Sequoia Dr
Leitchfield, KY
Total Health & Beauty Center
270-597-2112
3376 Mammoth Cave Rd
Brownsville, KY
Curves
(866) 439-0953
507 Salt River Rd.
Leitchfield, KY
Jazzercise Danville Hogsett Elementary School
(859)948-4817
300 Waveland Ave.
Danville, KY
Louisville-Lyndon Snap Fitness
502-426-9848
1115 Herr Lane
Louisville, KY
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Weight Gain Later in Life: A Disability Risk?

No one wants to gain weight at any point in life, whether they're a self-conscious teen looking for the perfect prom date or a postmenopausal mother of the bride who needs to look good in her evening gown. Extra pounds at any time are a health risk, not to mention a self-esteem killer. But one particular time of life may be extra fraught when it comes to adding pounds and inches. A new study out of Italy shows that people who gain weight after age 50 are at a higher risk of becoming disabled than those whose weight holds steady through the passing decades.

In this study, researchers at the University of Padova recruited more than 2,900 people who were at least 65 years old and asked them how much they had weighed at age 50. Those who were at a normal weight at 50 but had gained more than 10 percent of their body weight during the intervening years were 1.61 times more likely to be disabled at their current ages, with disability defined as having difficulty doing at least one daily-living activity such as showering or dressing. The people who had gained between five and 10 percent of their body weight were almost one and a half times more likely to be disabled. For people who were already obese at 50, the figures were far worse: Those who added at least another 10 percent to their body weight were almost 2.6 times likelier to be disabled later in life, and those who gained between five and 10 percent of their body weight were 1.65 times likelier to be disabled in some way...

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